Barclays shares: Optimists see an opportunity

These results do not impress, but there's lots going on at Barclays and plenty to interest investors.

Without the attention generated by activist investor Edward Bramson, it's likely that today's lacklustre investment banking performance at Barclays (LSE:BARC) may have been passed off as just another quarter blighted by difficult market conditions.

After all, US rivals such as Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan's corporate and investment banking arm have already reported sharp falls in Q1 profitability in recent days.

But with Bramson gunning for a seat on the Barclays board at next week's AGM, today's 11% drop in income in corporate and investment banking serves to heighten scrutiny on his campaign for the division to be shrunk in favour of boosting shareholder returns.

Bramson, whose investment vehicle has built up a 5.5% stake in Barclays, believes it is better to refocus the group on its lower-risk retail operations in the same way that rival Lloyds Banking Group (LSE:LLOY) has already done.

CEO Jes Staley is sticking by his strategy and points out today that the investment banking division outperformed its rivals in a testing quarter that meant the bank's overall return on tangible equity (RoTE) fell to 9.6% from 11% a year earlier.

He insists the bank, whose shares trade with a forward yield of just over 4%, remains well-positioned to increase cash returns to shareholders whilst still maintaining a strong capital position. However, this "jam tomorrow" promise of potential buy-backs has so far failed to convince investors in spite of a large number of 'buy' recommendations.

Source: TradingView Past performance is not a guide to future performance

Shares have now languished below 200p for almost a year, with the stock down another 2% to 163p today. Broker UBS, however, continues to think the stock has the potential to be trading at 230p, while Shore Capital has reiterated its target price of 290p.

In a note published this week, Napier said UBS had 'buy' recommendations on RBS and Lloyds, with price targets of 80p and 290p respectively. RBS investors will be hoping that today's departure of Ross McEwan triggers an upturn in fortunes for the share price, which is almost a third lower than when he took the helm in October 2013.

In fairness to McEwan, he has delivered on the strategy he set out at the time of his arrival by retrenching from many overseas markets and bringing the group back to profit as a much slimmer entity. Investors will hear more about progress in Q1 results tomorrow.

For Barclays, today's performance was a mixed bag after group income came in 3% below consensus but costs were better. Should softer income conditions persist, Barclays said it was in a position to cut costs deeper than the current 2019 spending guidance of between £13.6 billion and £13.9 billion.

It is sticking by its core targets to achieve RoTEs of 9% in 2019 and 10% in 2020. The figure was 8.5% in 2018, with Barclays UK achieving a 16.7% RoTE compared with 8.7% for Barclays International.

The Barclays retail division nudged underlying profits 1% higher to £600 million in the quarter, with continuing margin pressures offset by growth in mortgages and deposits. The RoTE was 16.4%.

In international, a RoTE of 10.6% reflected the drop in investment banking income due to reduced client activity, lower volatility and a smaller banking fee pool across the industry. Markets income decreased 6% to £1.37 billion, while banking fees income declined 17%.

UBS said: "After the US reporting season it is not news that industry capital markets income was poor in Q1. Even so, Barclays revenues were weaker than consensus in both key operating divisions."

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Full performance can be found on the company or index summary page on the interactive investor website. Simply click on the company's or index name highlighted in the article.

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